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Welcome, my name is Garri Voodoo. My journal will feature articles by my good friend, the violinist and music scholar, Runa Fanany. She will mostly cover classical music, with perhaps a slightly alternative point of view. Enjoy!

Classical Music Journal - July 2006

Every day this week, I will be looking at a stage in the development of the orchestra we’ve come to know and love. To start things off, I’m going to look at how any type of massed ensemble first came about - the absolute primitive beginnings of the orchestra.

Although orchestras in a similar fashion to what we know them as today(with strings and wind both represented with a constant structure) probably started to exist during the 17th century, there were actually developments of groups of players long before this. Musicians were employed by civil authorities going as far back as the 13th century. By the beginning of the 14th century, civil musicians were employed in many centres across Europe, from Florence in Italy to Ypres in Belgium. The tasks of these civil employed musicians were varied. They could be employed for playing in public during periods of celebration, or to join with the choirs of churches. The latter was probably the more often occurrence, since the pervasive nature of religion during this period can not be stressed strongly enough.


A set of three cornetts
English waits were a type of guard employed by authorities in England, and in addition to their duties as town watch they were usually instrumentalists of some simple wind instruments, most notably the shawm(a more raucous type of simple oboe). Over time, musical duties of the waits increased, and they were increasingly employed for the entertainment of monarchs. In 1589, Sir Francis Drake employed 5 Norwich waits, playing shawms, trombone and recorder, as entertainment on ship for his expedition to Lisbon. As well as being the first Ship’s Band, this demonstrates the small scale that music was still produced on when played by instruments(as opposed to choirs).


Germany had employed groups similar to waits, called Stadtpfeifer, since the 13th century, but another step towards the modern orchestra was taken in the 16th century with the development of ‘Turmmusik’, meaning ‘Tower Music’. This consisted of consorts of various groups of instruments performing music at the top of the church or town-hall tower. They mostly played church chorales, but occasionally also played music specifically created for the consorts called ‘Turmsonaten’.

Instruments that were used by consorts from the 16th century onwards included shawms, lutes, drums, cornetts(a horn or wooden tube with finger holes but played like a trumpet), sackbuts(primitive trombones), recorders, fiddles(forerunners to violins), and trumpets. These instruments were often produced in different sizes to play in different ranges, in the way that recorders still are.

Obviously, this music was on a much smaller scale than even classical orchestras, a typical consort might consist of 8 to 10 people or less. There was no standardisation apart from what simply became trends, such as the common use of the shawm and sackbuts. To start to hear music that was organised and actually composed for an orchestra, people would have to wait until the baroque era, which is the period I’ll be looking at tomorrow.
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Video games are sadly a relatively forgotten media format when looking at music composed for multimedia. Largely, music for video games serves a similar function as music written for movies or commercials. It is used as an evocative device to intensify or illustrate the action on screen, and by the early 1990s, video game music had reached a level of cinematic maturity that wouldn't have been dreamed of ten years prior.

A screenshot from Super Mario Brothers
Possibly because these progressions developed so quickly, within a single generation, video game music is not taken as seriously as other art forms. But even old examples displayed some merit of attempting to depict a scene. The themes from the original Super Mario Brothers game on the NES, from 1985, should be familiar to almost all people(if they aren't for you, midis of the main themes can be found on the Video Games Music Archive). The bright sunny skies of most levels are indicated with a lively and syncopated theme to match. As Mario heads underground, the theme changes to be sparser and in a deeper register to indicate his new environment. When Mario dies, a short comedic passage indicates this. Though the set of sounds may be limited, it is impressive what was done to try and depict various scenes


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Most of the famous composers we know about from the classical era and onwards were largely virtuosic pianists. Beethoven, Mozart, Brahms, Liszt, Chopin, Mendelssohn, Haydn and a great many more, composed a wealth of music for keyboard instruments which revealed their intimate relationship with the instruments they played. These composers also wrote works for solo instruments which they themselves had no experience playing. Beethoven is well remembered for his numerous string quartets, Brahms enriched violin and clarinet repertoire with several varied works, Mozart wrote the famous horn concertos(not to mention works for bassoon, clarinet and flute), and all of these composers at some point wrote works for the orchestra where they required a knowledge of every orchestral instrument. Their experience with the keyboard is obviously going to only take them so far.

To bridge this gap of instrumental knowledge, composers have tended to ‘buddy up’ with performers when writing for certain instruments. Usually, this is a win win situation for all involved. Think about it - performers gain the reputation of debuting works and having a composer write specifically for them, composers gain assistance in the composition process and an exacting control over their desired interpretation. Historical personalities such as clarinettist Anton Stadtler, and violinist Joseph Joachim would be practically unknown today if the former wasn’t the dedicatee of Mozart’s clarinet works, and the latter didn’t debut concertos by Bruch and Brahms. Performing compositions can turn musicians into legends


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MATURE CONTENT
   


Last week when I was talking about Midori, I mentioned that there was an abundance of very high quality violin players in the world. While there are many virtuosos of all instruments world wide, simply due to popularity of instruments, violin and piano players dominate the numbers. When looking at young prodigies, occurrences of incredible talent on wind instruments are especially rare. While instrumental popularity plays a part, there is also the factor of simple physical inadequacies of youth. It is very difficult, for instance, for a young player to fully support the weight of the clarinet on their thumb and to reach all the required keys.

For this reason, most wind playing virtuosi don’t really emerge in a proper sense until at the very least, their mid to late 20s. It is especially surprising to find an exception to this in Julian Bliss, the 16 year old British clarinettist


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The way instruments in the orchestra look has become such a standard thing that any changes would be instantly noticed as quite odd. Woodwind instruments are made out of a variety of different materials for the purposes of best suiting their sound and their construction. Tradition plays a part, but is often less important. But what led these materials to be used, and what exactly do they do to the sound?

Nicola Boud with a classical boxwood clarinet, from the Halcyon Ensemble website
Most wind instruments, such as the oboe, clarinet, flute and recorder were traditionally made from boxwood, a very light wood that was relatively easy to come by in the 18th century. Since this time, these instruments have been changed to be made out of grenadilla, resin, metal and plastic. While partly to do with manufacturing advances, since cast resin and plastic weren’t an option in the classical period, most of the change in construction has been to change the sound


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Elgar’s Long Standing Enigma

July 21st 2006 07:30
In the second part of my coverage on Edward Elgar’s Enigma Variations, I’ll be looking at the idea of a ‘hidden theme’ in the work. The program for the concert I attended recently had a fascinating section written by Yvonne Frindle that succinctly summarised information about this. To save pointless paraphrasing, I have reproduced it here verbatim:

For more than a century the ‘enigma’ of Elgar’s Variations has kept musicians and music-lovers intrigued. As recently as 1999, Julian Rushton, in his Cambridge Music Handbook on the Enigma Variations, devoted a chapter to the many ingenious solutions that have been proposed, while observing, ‘since interest in the question shows no signs of abating, I expect to be out of date on publication’. Rarely has a musical work prompted so much speculation. But first, the facts


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The story is often told that in 1898 after a day teaching, Elgar sat down at a piano and began fashioning the tune known as ‘Enigma’. It is a unique theme of slightly hesitant melancholy, and as his wife showed interest in it, he created a number of variations on it, imagining what some of his aquaintances might have done with it ‘if they were asses enough to compose’.

The 'Enigma' theme by Elgar

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Having recently had the pleasure of attending a concert of the Britten and Bruch (No. 1) violin concertos performed by the virtuoso violinist, Midori, and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra (under Miguel Harth-Bedoya), I thought I might relate some of my impressions of Midori and her playing.

The hype surrounding Midori tends to precede her. And well it might. Despite rare occurrences in each generation of people, such as Yehudi Menuhin, it is rare to find a performing artist that reaches maturity and launches successful, critically acclaimed tours in many countries around the world before their 30s. But Midori has managed to do just that


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C. P. E. Bach, a classical composer living between 1714 and 1788, is not the most well known of his family. In fact, in comparison to contemporaries such as Haydn, Mozart and Gluck, much of his work unfortunately pales in historical comparison. However, in a small group of composers of who Bach is the most well known, a musical movement was taking place which not only had repercussions through all classical music, but actually anticipated many of the ideals of romanticism some hundred years later. This important movement came to be known as the emfindsam style.

C. P. E. Bach
Possibly a response to the simplicity and non complexity of the rococo era galante style, which had a function of merely entertaining the ear with pleasant sounds, emfindsam music was complex, varied, surprising and more stirring. The ideal of the style has been said to stir the emotions, to surprise and stun the listener, and to present through various musical techniques unexpected qualities


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Around the middle of the nineteenth century, Franz Liszt is credited with the general creation of the ‘Symphonic Poem’ or ‘Tone Poem’. In actuality, this was little more than a new term for a genre that had been around for perhaps as much as half a century. But what actually are, and what is the significance of tone poems?

Fingal's Cave, inspiration for Mendelssohn's famous concert overture
A tone poem is defined as a single movement work for orchestra, which aims to depict a particular piece of imagery or narrative. Some famous tone poems include Debussy’s ‘Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun’ and Sibelius’ ‘Finlandia’. Tone poems are an evolution from concert overtures. It is probably debatable that these are one and the same with different names at different times in history. Both tone poems and concert overtures are one movement works for orchestra, and almost always concert overtures attempted to depict a scene, idea or emotion. Some famous concert overtures include Beethoven’s ‘Leonore’ overture and Mendelssohn’s ‘Fingal’s Cave’ overture (The Hebrides


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It is well known that it is impossible for a composer to specify every condition of the sound of their compositions. The tone of instrumentalists varies greatly between players, players may choose their own embellishments and cadenzas, and no two performances can ever be exactly the same. Even in electronic music, where all sounds can be controlled on a recording, playback will vary depending on the acoustics and sound system where the music is played. Some composers over the years have taken influence from this principle - that so much of music is uncontrolled - and expanded it to make compositions where sections of material can depend on entirely random factors.

Probably the most well known exponent of this style is John Cage(1912 - 1992). While his early works don’t hint at the styles he was to pursue later, by the 1950s he was producing works which were composed by aleatoric methods, some of which had factors of their performances decided by chance


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In performing classical, romantic, and baroque music, scores are meticulously studied, performance practices as gleamed from historical documents are attempted to be replicated, and a vision as to what a composer truly intended in his work is tried to be grasped at, as accurately as is possible. But as original instruments sound so truly different from modern ones, it is surprising that the music of Beethoven, Bach, Mozart and Haydn has found itself so at home with a new set of sounds.

An early 19th century piano, taken from the Period Piano Company website.
Beethoven, writing in the late 18th and early 19th century was not writing for the concert Steinway piano his music is so often heard on today. The piano of the late 18th century was at least 2 octaves smaller, wooden framed, and with a delicate, pure and sensitive sound. Many of Beethoven’s middle and late period piano sonatas are renowned for being a virtuosic feast for the senses, with vibrant and insanely fast runs and arpeggiated figures, and bashing, violent octaves. Yet on the instrument he wrote for, this sense of violence was not as easily achieved, since dissonances would die much faster on the softer instruments, and the lower register of the instrument was as clean as the upper register. While not producing the same strong sounds he is sometimes known for, these pianos bring to light a totally different attitude in his slow and soft movements. The lightness of a classical piano is possibly better suited to creating the magical soundscapes of Beethoven’s Adagios. A poignant case in point can be seen in the first movement of his piano sonata Op. 27 No. 2, ‘Quasi Una Fantasia’, more commonly known as the ‘Moonlight’ sonata. Played on a period instrument, its gentler quiet approach makes it easy to see how it had the name ‘Moonlight’ associated with it


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